"There are sometimes one or two houses in that price range that don't actually cost more due to condo fees" and "there are plenty of houses" are not the same thing. Realistically, $400k is no longer a viable budget for Silver Spring. Signed, someone who's lost out on offers in this crazy market and moved to an exurb to get a place under $400k. |
We stress about retirement savings only bc feel that we’re behind. I spent the past decade paying off student loans, trying to save for a house, and paying childcare. Now that income has increased and we have no debt, we’re focusing on retirement savings. I think that I may read DCUM too much bc I do have anxiety about how much we have in retirement. We don’t spend much at all but I have health issues that may cut me off of work sooner than I’d like so I feel that my potential savings window is smaller. Plus, healthcare costs may mount |
It's probably not as warped as a poor family thinking they're still middle class. In what society is a yearly family vacation not a middle class thing to do? Or driving two basic cars? Or where a 2,000 sqft house is a larger house? A PP above commented that being middle class meant you had more than just addressing your basic needs. I think a pretty good gauge of what a smack dab in the middle middle class HHI should be is a pair of married schoolteachers. In Howard County, two teachers with 15 years' teaching experience (so early 40s, prime family age) will have a joint HHI of between 150-160, because they will make between 75 to 80k each. 150k is very much the "real life" middle class HHI for a family in most metro areas in order to be able to afford a modest house, run two decent cars, and have a decent life that is a bit more than just addressing your basic needs. This is corroborated by that the national average price for a SFH is 360kish, which is what a family making 150k can afford. If that's the average price for a single family house, then it does strongly suggest the average smack dab in the middle class income is 150kish. |
That’s not middle class. Upper middle maybe but middle class no. What you are describing is upper middle class. |
Very few people would call married teachers upper middle class. Or a 360k house an upper middle class house. In Howard, for example, that buys you a simple townhouse. The hypothetical teacher couple could also chose to commute from Carroll County where the 360k can get them a very modest SFH. But in neither case are they upper middle class. What's happened is that the overton window for a middle class has shifted upwards. You're trapping yourself into thinking that middle class has to be right in the middle, aka median income. Keep in mind a median income is disproportionately skewed by singles, couples without children, retirees and all that. For a functioning family unit of two working parents and children it's a very different story. That's why the average price for a SFH nationally is 360k, because that represents the real middle class family HHI. Otherwise you are arguing that the middle classes can't afford SFH. |
| I'd have more children. |
You need to get out of the DC mindset, but yes, its not middle class. It sucks money does not go as far in this area, but its not middle class. |
So everyone is rich apparently. |
Welcome to DCUM |
We live in a 1000 square foot house we bought for around $400K. Middle class cannot afford our house. Be real. |
I don't know where you are but in the Baltimore suburbs 350k is about average for a standard older detached SFH with decent schools in ordinary areas. Those houses are usually between 1500-1800 sqft. That's very middle class. Are there cheaper housing? Sure. The people who buy them are working to lower middle class. Same for more expensive housing for the upper middle classes. From what I can tell that's fairly representative of middle America / flyover. If the *national* average for a SFH is 360k, it's pointless arguing the middle classes can't afford a 400k house in the DMV, which is an entirely different ballgame. I suspect you're hung up on thinking working classes are the middle classes when they are really just working class or maybe lower middle class. |
Truly I can't imagine reading 5 pages of this - would be so depressing. Sad Moving on. |
THIS |
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Some of you on DCUM are out of touch with the reality.
Middle class does not mean: - Not having to worry about money - Having a house in the most attractive neighborhood. - Sending kids to the best schools in the state - Having college fully funded - Multiple vacations If that's what you think you should have to be middle class, you are wrong. That's what makes you upper middle class or rich. |
In other words, middle class means you're poor? It sounds like living from paycheck to paycheck in a crappy house in a bad area is what makes you middle class?
I do think someone is out of touch with reality, and it is you. I can imagine how someone from a poor background can think of a basic middle class as wealthy. You are also putting words in other people's mouth. No one has argued for all the bullets in your list as a requirement for being basic middle class. It's more like: - having some savings and some retirement funds. Which is not tantamount to never worrying about money. - having a basic house (and for a family it usually means a decent SFH) in a decent area with decent schools. - having access to a decent public education. Doesn't mean it's 9 schools on Greatschools but decent enough. - helping to pay for college, which usually means in-state at a local / regional state school and often with loans still involved - going to the Delaware or NC beaches once a year, usually with 1-2 other families sharing a rental. Or a lake somewhere. Now are you going to argue this is upper middle class? |